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A54682 The antiquity, legality, reason, duty and necessity of præ-emption and prourveyance, for the King, or, Compositions for his pourveyance as they were used and taken for the provisions of the Kings household, the small charge and burthen thereof to the people, and the many for the author, great mischiefs and inconveniences which will inevitably follow the taking of them away / by Fabian Philipps. Philipps, Fabian, 1601-1690. 1663 (1663) Wing P2004; ESTC R10010 306,442 558

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in many as Canterbury York Durham Lincoln Coventry and Lichfield Exeter Ely Winchester and Norwich much abated when as now by the rise of mony and prises they are greatly different from what they then we●e and are of some of those Benefices and Spiritual Promotions but the eighth or tenth and of many but the twentieth part And receives his prae-Fines and post-Fines Licences and Pardons of Alienation upon Common Assurances at less then a tenth and many times less then a twentieth part of the true yearly values of the lands or rates which the Law ordering the compositions to be upon oath intendeth him after the example of his Royal Father who permitted the yearly value of lands in Capite and by Knight-service to be found by Juries and Inquisitions at the tenth part of the now true yearly value when as by oath they were to find and certifie the true yearly values and all the Lands of the Kingdome but his own are raised and improved generally ten to one or very much in very many parts and particulars thereof more then what they were two hundred years last past in or about the Reign of King Henry the sixth when as the errable and pasture lands which are now in Middlesex let at fifteen or sixteen shillings per annum an Acre and Meadow commonly at forty shillings and sometimes at three pounds the Acre were in Anno 1 Ed. 3. at a farre lesser yearly value when two Toftes of Land one Mill fifty acres of Land and two acres of Wood in Kentish Town near London was of no greater yearly value then 20 s. and 3 d. and the courser sort of pasture land in Essex now let for 8 or 9 s. the Acre and Meadow at twenty or thirty shillings the Acre was then in that Countie and in many fertill Counties within sixty miles and farre less of London valued but at eight pence per annum and four or five pence the Acre errable and the like valuations were holden in licences of Mortmain in all his extents or values of lands seised for taken into his hands Received their primer seisins at the like small yearly rate and took for suing out of Liveries which may be resembled to a Copiholders admittance not a fifth part proportionably to what is now paid by Copiholders to their Lords of Manors and respites of homage as they were taxed and set in anno primo Jacobi in a very easie manner Did not in the valuation of Lands and Estates as some Lords of Manors have been known to doe whereby to rack and oppress the Widdows and Fatherless employ some Sycophants or Flatterers of the Manor to over-value them or have some Decoyes in the assessing of Fines to seem willing to pay or give as much when they are sure to have a good part of it privately restored unto them again or cause their poor Tenants to be misled and the more willingly cozen themselves by crediting hard and erroneous Surveyes taking Leases of their Copihold Estates or using some other unwarrantable and oppressive devices worse then the Pharisaicall Committees did in the renting of lands they had no title unto when they did put men to box one another by overbidding themselves at their wickedly improving Boxes But did according to his Father King James his instructions given to his Councel of the Court of Wards in the assessing of Fines for the Marriages of the Wards and renting of their Lands which too many of the Nobility and Gentry and other of his Subjects did never or very seldome order the Stewards of their Manors to doe order that upon considerations which might happen therein either by reason of the broken estate of the deceased want of provision for his wife his great charge of children unprovided for infirmity or tenderness of the Heirs incertainty of the title or greatness of the incumbrances upon the Lands they should have liberty as those or the like considerations should offer themselves to use that good discretion and conscience which should befit in mitigating Fines or Rents to the relief of such necessities Suffers the Fees of his Chancery and Courts of Common-pleas and Kings-Bench for the small Seals to be receved as they were in the Reign of King Ed. 3. and the Tenths reserved upon the Abby and Religious lands at no greater an yearly value then they were in the later end of the Reign of King Henry the eighth when they were first granted though now they are of a four times or greater yearly value The Fees of the Seals of Original and Judiciall Writs and Process in Wales as they were in the 34. year of the Reign of King Henry the eighth when the English Courts of Justice were there first erected takes six pence a piece for Capons reserved for Rent in Queen Elizabeths time the issues of lands forfeited unto him upon Writs of distringas at such small rates as six shillings eight pence upon one distringas and 10 s. at another which the Law intendeth to be the profits of the Lands distrained betwixt the Teste and the return of the Writs which would have amounted unto twenty times or a great deal more and receiveth his Fines upon Formedons and othe real Actions granted and issuing out of the Chancery at most gentle and moderate rates his Customes inward and outward at easie rates proportionable to such small values as the Merchants advantage to themselves shall give in or the Officers or Commissioners for the King at the Custome-houses shall at randome and without view think to be a favourable and easie estimate Some single ones of which before recited undervaluations besides the profits of the Tolls of Fairs and Markets if rightly and justly paid according to the true improved values or two of the most of them would make up in a constant Revenue unto him a great deal more then the Compositions for his Pourveyances yearly and lately amounted unto by the difference betwixt his rates or prices and those of the Market A due consideration whereof if there were nothing else to put in the Ballance might induce the Earls Marquesses and Dukes of England who have received their honors and dignities from his Royal Progenitors to permit him as well to enjoy his Pourveyance and reasonable support maintenance of the honor of himself and his Royal Family as they doe take and receive of him their Creation monies being antiently a third part of the fines and profits of the Counties whereof the Earls are denominated since reduced to a certain and yearly sum of money when as also not a few of them have had great and large Revenues given them by his Royal Progenitors to uphold and sustein their Dignities and Honors And the Bishops whose Bishopricks and Baronies and most of the Revenues belonging unto them were of the foundation of the Kings Royal Ancestors and received their Investitures and Temporalties from him may if they shall think the Compsitions for Pourveyances ought not
afterwards by reason of the Murrain of Cattel and a more then ordinary unseasonableness of those years twenty quarters of Corn were furnished for the Kings use and taken by the Sheriff of Kent at eleven shillings the quarter as appeareth by a Tally struck fo● the payment thereof yet extant in his Majesties Receipt of the Exchequer and although that in the year next following by reason of a peace with France and the great victories before obtained against it by the English when the King was rich and the people rich which makes a Kingdom compleatly rich with the riches and spoiles gained thereby and that great store of Gold and Silver Plate Jewels and rich vestiments sparsim per Angliam in singulorum domibus were almost in every house in England to be found and that in the 23. year of the Raign of the said King so great a mortality of men and Cattle happned ut vix media aut decima pars hominum remaneret as scarce a third par● and as some were of opinion not above a tenth part of the people remained alive which must needs have made a plenty of money tunc redditus perierunt saith the Historian hinc terra ob defectum Colonorum qui nusquam erant remansit inculta tantaque miseria ex bis malis est secuta quod mundus ad pristinum statum redeundi nunquam postea habuit facultatem insomuch as Rents or Tenants for Lands were not to be had the Lands for want of husbandmen remained untilled which would necessarily produce a dearth and scarcity of Victuals And so great was the misery as the Kingdom was never like to recover its former condition And that in the 25. year of the Raign of King Edward the third by reason of the Kings coyning of groats and half groats less in value then the Esterling money Victuals were through all England more dear then formerly and the Workmen Artificers and servants raised their Wages yet in Anno 12 R. 2. though there was a great dearth yet Wooll was sold for two shillings a Stone a Bushel of Wheat for thirteen pence which was then thought to be a great rate a Bushel of Wheat being sold the year before for six pence And in Anno 14. of King R. 2. in an account made in the Receipt of the Exchequer by Roger Durston the Kings Bayliff he reckons for three Capons paid for Rent four pence half penny for thirteen Hens one shilling and seven pence for a P●ow●share paid for Rent eight pence and for four hundred Couple of Conies at three pence a couple one hundred shillings In Anno 2 H. 5. the Parliament understood four pounds thirteen shillings four pence to be a good yearly a●lowance or salary for a Chaplain being men of more then ordinary quality so g●eat a cheapness was there then of Victuals and other provisions for the livelihood of men and for Parish Priests six pounds per annum for their Board Apparrel and other necessaries and being to provide that Jurors which were to be impanelled touching the life of man Plea Real or Forty Marks damage should be as the Statute of 42 E. 3. c. 5. required men of substance good estate and credit did ordain that none should be Jurors in such cases but such as had fourty shillings per annum in Lands above all charges which was so believed to be a good estate in 5 H. 8. c. 5. which was almost one hundred years after as the Parliament of that year did think it to be an estate competent enough for such kind of men In the Raign of King Henry the sixth after that France a great and rich neighboring kingdom was wholy conquered and possessed by the English who had not then learned their waste●ul Luxuries or Mimick fashions and could not with such an increase of Dominion and so great spoils and riches transported from thence hither but be abundantly and more then formerly full of money the price and rates of Victuals was so cheap as the King could right worshipfully as the Record saith keep his Royal Court which then could be no mean one with no greater a charge then four and twenty thousand pounds per annum and in the 33. year of his raign which was in Anno Domini one thousand four hundred fifty and five by assent of Parliament granted to his son the Prince of Wales but one thousand pound per annum whilst he had Dirt and Lodging for himself and his servants in his house until he should come to the age of eight years and afterwards no more then 2000. Marks per annum for the charge of his Wardrobe Wages of servants and other necessa●y expences whilst he remained in the house of the King his ●ather which was then thought sufficient to support the honor and dignity of the Prince and heir apparent of England though now such a sum of money can by some one that m●ndeth his pleasure more then his estate and the present more then the future be thrown away in one night or day at Cards or Dice In Anno 37 H. 6. Meadow in Derbyshire was valued but at ten pence per Acre and errable Land at three pence In the 22. year of the Raign of King Edward the fourth which was ●n the year of our Lord one thousand four hundred eighty and two the price and value of six Oxen was at the highest valuation but ten pounds In the seventh year of the Raign of King H 7. which was in Anno Domini one thousand four hundred ninety and two Wheat was sold at London for twenty pence the Bushel which was then accounted a great dearth and three years after for six pence the Bushel Bay Salt for three pence half penny Namp●wich Salt for six pence the Bushel white Herrings nine shillings the Barrel red Herrings three shillings the Cade in the fifteenth year of his Raign Gascoign Wine was sold at London for fourty shillings the Tun and a quarter of Wheat for four shillings In the 24. year of the Raign of King Henry the 8. a fat Ox was sold at London for 26 s. an half peny a pound for Beef and Pork and a half penny farthing a pound for Veal and Mutton was by Act of Parliament thought to be a reasonable price and with gain enough afforded In the fourth year of the Raign of Queen Mary which was in the year of our Lord God one thousand five hundred fifty and seven when very many families and multitudes of the people of England had been but a little before greatly monyed enriched by the lands spoil or the Monasteries and other Religious houses and their large possessions Wheat was sold before Harvest for four Marks the quarter Malt at four and fourty shillings the quarter and Pease at six and fourty shillings and eight pence but after Harvest Wheat was sold at London for five shillings the quarter Malt at six
to be by an invadeing of the peoples Rights and Properties in their moveables or immovables but a receiving or imposing of that which publick welfare and the contracts or respects of Subjects in general or particular have for benefits received and to be continued reduced into reasonable Customs and made to be as a most ready and willing Tribute Oblations or Duty to their Kings and Princes may go as high as Filial duty and Paternity and a retribution or gratitude for the peace and plenty which their Subjects and people enjoy under their Government Love Honor and Reverence for their Protection and self Preservation publick weal and safety and of every mans particular included in the General and was to be found in the morning of the world as well as in the afternoon and evening of it when as Joseph relieving the Egyptians necessity which a national Famine had brought upon them gave them Lands and Seed-Corn to sow it that they might have food for their Housholds and little ones and made a Law over the Land of Egypt to this day that the King should have the Fifth part of the yearly profits except the land of the Priests only which became not Pharaohs And in the Reign of King David when the Moabites being become his Subjects sent him Guifts and Shobi the Son of Nahash and Rabbab of the Children of Ammon and Machir the Son of Ammiel of Lodebar and Barzillai the Gileadite of Rogelim in his sorrowfull march against his Son Absolom brought Beds and Basins Earthen Vessels Wheat and Barley Floure Parched Corn Beans Lentils Parched Honey Butter Sheep and Cheese of Kyne for David and the people and in all or most of the Circumstances of what was lately used in England was no stranger in the happy and famous Government of King Solomon the wisest of men whose wisdom excelled the wisdom of all the East Country and all the wisdom of Egypt for besides the Victuals and Provision which his twelve great Officers or Socage Tenants provided for him and all that came unto his Table all the Kingdoms which he reigned over from the River of Euphrates unto the Land of the Philistines and unto the border of Egypt and all other his Dominions brought Presents unto him and his prouision for one day was thirty measures of fine Floure threescore measures of meal ten fat Oxen Twenty Oxen out of the Pastures and an hundred sheep besides Harts Roe Bucks Fallow Deer and fatted Fowl And all the Earth sought to Solomon to hear his wisdom which God had put in his heart and they brought every man his present Vessels of Silver Vessels of Gold Garments Armour Spices Horses and Mules a rate year by year And he raised a Levy out of all Israel and the Levy was thirty thousand men and sent them to Lebanon as workmen ten Thousand a month by course and two months at home and Judah and Israel were many as is the sand which is by the Sea in multitude eating and drinking and making merry and dwelt safely every man under his own Vine and under his Figg Tree from Dan even unto Beer-Sheba all the days of Solomon and as Josephus saith had Tribute Gatherers over the Syrians who brought him Provision towards the keeping of his house horses Mesha King of Moab rendred unto Ahab King of Israel a Tribute of one hundred Thousand Lambs and an hundred Thousand Rams with the wool some of the Philistines brought Jehosophat King of Judah Presents and Tribute Silver and the Arabians brought him Flocks seven thousand Rams and seven hundred Hee-goats And in the measure and description of the Holy City shewed to the Prophet Ezekiel in the Twenty Fifth year of Jehoiakims Captivity a portion of the City and Suburbs and Oblations were appointed for the Prince Which custom or right due to the Kings or Governors was not after the long and lamentable Captivity of the Children of Israel at their return and building of Jerusalem either forgotten or thought fit to be laid aside when as the Righteous Nehemiah considering the necessities of the people refused the bread of the Governor and that which was prepared for him daily which was one Oxe and six thousand sheep and also Fowls and once in ten days store of all sorts of wine Nor was that usage and way of remuneration to Superiors confined only to the pedagoguie of the Jews under the Severities of their Mosaical Laws or their being so much weaned from avarice or selfishnes by their remissions in their years of Jubile their many oblations free-will offerings and chargeable Sacrifices and no less a penaltie then death ordained for not obeying their Princes or Magistrates but was by a light of nature and emanation of right Reason some way or other brought or carried to the Greeks no despisers of wisdom or prudential imitations Agamemnon at the siege of Troy was able to treat the chief of the Grecian Army in his Tent with all fitting provisions And Eustathius the Scoliast saith that the King had at the devision of any spoils an extraordinary share assigned him for such entertainments The Spartan Kings had in all Sacrifices the Chynes and the skins for their honorary Fees as amongst the Hebrews the Priests had the shoulders and in that popular rustick and unmanerly Commonwealth of the Lacedemonians their Kings even in the time of their insolent Ephori who dominered over them and when they lived and were maintained ex publico out of the publick could not be denied by the Laws of Lycurgus in egressibus their marches or progresses capere quaecunque pecora libuerit to take what Cattel they pleased Et singulis quoque Calendis mensium singula pecora eis è publico data fuerint And in the Calends of every month the people gave or presented Cattel unto them Apollini immolanda to sacrifice to Apollo and when their Pythii or those two whom the Kings did use upon occasions to send to Delphos to consult the Oracle were publickly to eat with them Regibus ad Caenam non euntibus binae Chaenices id est Semimodia Farinae uni singulae Cotylae i. e. sextarii presentibus dupla data fuerint if the Kings for sometimes they had two came not to the place appointed to eat with the Pythii certain large proportions of meat wine and other Provisions were sent them and when they did come had a double proportion more then the Pythii allowed them The Athenians whilst they were a Republick highly valuing and carefully preserving their Liberties had their Tolls and vectigalia publica their Senators as well as their Judges having an allowance or pensions out of them and their Sitophilaces and Frumentatores or Overseers of the Corn were able to take care of the Provision of Corn quod in atticum emperium adveheretur duas partes in urbem mercatores deferre cogerent that two parts of the Corn which should be brought
to the King many if not all of which were by Priviledges or otherwise exempted from Pourveyance and being at a low and great undervalue in the latter end of the Raign of King Henry the Eighth now above one hundred years since of the yearly value of one hundred eighty six thousand five hundred twelve pounds eight shillings peny farthing now improved unto more then Ten times that yeerly value are for the most part of them come to be the inheritance of Lay-men And too much of the Revenues of Bishops which by a sacrilegious alienation from the Church are not enjoyed by any of the sons of Levy A great part of the Lands belonging to Monasteries or Religious houses by custome or exemption become Tythe free The greatest part of 3845. Appropriations or Impropriations which had been formerly designed and given ad mensam unto several Monasteries and Religious houses for the better support and maintenance of their hospitality and which before contributed nothing to the Kings Pourveyance now made to be a Temporal and Lay inheritance Many Forrests and Chaces and a great part of other Forrests and Chases Deafforrested much Assart lands and many Parks converted to Tillage or Pasture No Escuage paid since the Reign of King Henry the sixth nor Aid leavyed to make the Kings eldest son a Knight or to marry his eldest daughter for above fifty years during the Reign of King Edward the sixth Queen Mary and Queen Elizabeth and very many Copy-hold estates which usually paid nothing at all to the provisions for the Kings houshold converted into Freeholds Many Fenns and Imbancked Marshes consisting of some hundred thousand Acres Drained or recovered from the Sea An Espargne or saving more then formerly of much money very far surmounting the yearly charge damage or losses by the Kings Pou●veyances in the purchase or procuring the Popes Bulls which as was affirmed in the Parliament of 25 H. 8. had betwixt that time and the fourth year of the Reign of King H. 7. cost the people of this Kingdome threescore thousand pounds Ste●ling by being no more troubled with provisions to Benefices many chargeable Oblations to the Church and mony spent in Lamps or Ta●ers Pourveyance or provisions for the Popes Legates Shrines Copes Altarages extraordinary Masses Dirges Trentals relaxations faculties grants aboltions Pensions Censes Procurations rescripts appeals and long and chargeable journyes to Rome where as well as in England as their own Monkes and W●iters affirm the Pope did Angariis Injuriis miseros exagitare poll and pill the wretched English made Walter Gray a Bishop of England in the Reign of King H. 3. pay one thousand pounds for his Pall and at the breaking up of every general Council extorted of every Prelate a great sum of money before he would give them leave to depart chid William Abbot of St. Albans for coming to take leave of him without any present and when he offered him fifty marks checked and inforced him before he went out of his Chamber to pay one hundred Marks the fashion being then for every man to pay dear for his Benedictions lay down his money ready told before his Holiness feet and if present Cash was wanting the Popes Merchants and Usurers were at hand but upon very hard conditions to supply it And so great were his Emunctiones as Mathew Paris calls them exactions and impositions in England as a bloody Wolf tearing the Innocent sheep by sometimes exacting a third part of the Clergies goods and at other times a twentieth by aides towards the defraying of his own wars and other pretences sometimes exacting the one half of an yearly revenew of their Benefices and enjoyning them under the penalty of their then dreadful Excommunications not to complain of it or publish it sending his Legats or Predicatores to wring and preach money out of the peoples purses pro negotio Crucis under colo●r of making a war to regain Jerusalem and the Holy Land out of the hands of the Saracens and by such a multitude of other contrivances and extorsions as all the Abbotts of England vul●u Flebili capite d●●nisso were with great sorrow and lamentation enforced to complain to the King of the impossibility of satisfying the Pope eos incessanter torquen●i incessantly grinding tormenting them of his avarice and exactions toto ●undo detestabiles to be abhorred of all the world By Dispensations pardons lice●ces Indulgencies vows pilgrimages Writs cal●ed perinde valere breeves and other instruments of s●●dry natures names and kinds in great 〈◊〉 which in the Act of Parliament of ●5 H. 8. 〈…〉 the exonerating of the Kings subjects from 〈…〉 and impositions paid to the See of Rome 〈…〉 said to have greatly decayed and impoverished 〈◊〉 ●●t●llerable exactions of great sums of money the subjects of the Realm A freedom from the chargeable giving of great qu●ntities of Lands for Chantries and the weani●g of that Clergy by the reformation of the Church o● England from their over-sucking or making sore the Breasts or Nipples of the common people which the murmuring men of these times would if they had as their forefathers tried it more then seven times and over and over be of the opinion of Piers the Plowman in Chaucer who being of the Romish Church wrote in the unfortunate Reign of King Richard the second when the Hydra of our late Rebellious devices spawned by the not long before ill grounded Doctrines and treasonable positions of the two Spencers father and son began to Craule complaining That the Friars followed folke that were rich And folk that were poor at little price they set And no Cors in the Kyrkeyard nor Kyrke was buried But quick he bequeth them ought or quit part of his det Adviseth his friend Go confesse to some Frier and shew him thy synnes For while Fortune is thy frend Friers will thee love And fetch the to their Fraternity and for thee beseech To their Prior Provinciall a pardon to have And pray for the pole by pole if thou be pecun●osus Brings in a Frier perswading a sick Farmer to make his confession to him rather then to his Parish Priest and requesting him as he lay upon his death-bed to bestow a Legacy upon his Covent Give me then of thy Gold to make our Cloister Quoth he for many a Muskle and many an Ouster When other men have been full well at ease Hath been our food our Cloister for to rease And yet God wot unneath the foundement Performed is ne of our pavement Is not a Tile yet within our wones By God we owen fourty pound for stones And in his Prologue to his Canterbury Tales thus Characters such a Frier Full sweetly heard he confession And pleasant was his absolution He was an easie man to give pennance There as he wist to have a good pitance The di●use of the old and never grudged course of Sponte Oblata's gifts or presents to the King and the
with some that have Tables daily furnished at the Kings charge to feed so many as depend upon it and entertain such men of quality as shall come to his Court about his or their affairs and would much advance their private purses and do well in their own families to have the expences of it turned into a yearly Pension in money wherein the King is like to be as much a saver as King Charles the Martyr was when he allowed Mr. Andrew Pitcarne the Master of his Hawks ten shillings per diem to provide Pigeons Hens and other meat for his Hawks and as he and many of his Progenitors have been in converting allowances or provisions into Salaries And that some of those who advise a Sparing not at all becoming the grandeur and honour of a Prince to make themselves the greater gainers by his bounty to be worse imployed upon themselves may suppose that which might be a fit Espargne in their own lesser Orbes and Oeconomies may serve for the Court and Family of an English King and that the Grandeur and Magnificence thereof would be but little or not at all lessened by some thriftie contrivances and abatements calculated only for their own Meridian and that the Power Authority and Virtue of a Prince can well enough subsist without the prop and support of that due Awe and Reverence which are to attend the Majesty of Kings and that some in their short sighted Policies may reckon such or the like good husbandries to be no small part of Prudence and Providence very laudable and fit to be put in practice Yet the Laws of God Nature and Nations and the state and magnificence of Kings and their Princely Families allowed as well as mentioned in the Book of God and Holy Writ as that of Pharaoh Saul David Solomon and Ahashuerus The State and Magnificence of all the Christian and Heathen Kings and Princes Grecian Magistrates Romane Consuls and Dictators Venetian Doges and Dutch Stadtholders and our laudable customs of England can teach every man who hath not abjured his own reason as well as the Laws of God and Nature and the reasonable customes of England how very necessary the honor and State of Princes are to the obedience and good Government of the people how much they conduce to their well-being how the observance honor and reverence due unto Kings are lessened by the meannesse of their Servants and diminishing their State and Port how unsafe and insipid such new found policies and contrivances would be and that the dishonor of the Prince is the unsafety and dishonor of the people who may easily and every where find a necessity of his Pourveyance or Compositions for it and no reason at all to deny it When the total of the charges of it will be so useful to their Soveraign so becomming his Royal Dignity so necessary to the honor and splendor of his house-keeping and that the parts which shall be charged upon particular men to make up that total will be so petit and inconsiderable as our Laws and the Compositions for Pourveyance had ordered it CHAP. VI. The small charge of the Pourveyance or Compositions for it to or upon such of the people as were chargeable with it AS may evidently and undeniably appear by the Compositions for Pourveyance which were agreed to be paid by the several Counties As For the County of Anglisey in Wales which hath eighty three Parishes but five pounds which is for every Parish not one shilling three pence it being commonly in every County charged onely upon the Lands of inheritance of the greater size or quantity not upon Copyholders or small Freeholders and upon those kind of Lands which were most proper for it and could better afford it as Wheat Malt c. upon Errable Lands and Cattel upon Pasture c. For the County of Mountgomery who we●e to provide yearly but twenty Sturks or smaller sized Cattle so called or sixty pounds per annum and had Fifty four Parishes whereof five or six were Borough Towns which made the charge upon every Parish to be little more then twenty shillings per annum All the charge of the Compositions for the Kings provisions being onely of one hundred and eighty Sturks in Wales and its thirteen shires or Counties which costes that Dominion yeerly no more then three hundred and sixty pounds The County of Worcester which hath one hundred and fifty two Parishes paid but four hundred ninety five pounds besides the Kings p●ice or rate allowed for provisions served in kinde which is but three pounds and seven shillings or thereabouts to be assessed upon every Parish Derbyshire having one hundred and six Parishes paid but two hundred fifty four pounds two shillings two pence which is something less then fifty shillings upon every Parish Yorkeshire which hath four hundred fifty nine Parishes besides many large Chapelries was charged with no more then four hundred ninety five pounds which was not two and twenty shillings upon every Parish one with another and would not be six pence a year upon every house one with another if no respect were to be had to the real or personal Estates of the proprietors which admits of large differences or proportions more or less then one another The County of Midlesex having seventy three Parishes besides what are in the London Suburbes paid but nine hundred seventeen pound nineteen shillings which by her great benefits by the Kings constant residence in it is in a better condition with her few but v●ry plentiful and numerous Parishes then the Counties further distant and by the letting and setting of their Lands Houses and Lodgings and the great rates and prices of all the Commodities which they sell to other people gaineth fourty to one at the least of what they loose by the Kings prices for his Pourveyance or houshold provisions the City of Westminster and the Suburb Parishes of London consisting more of houses then Lands or Pasture and being not at all charged or troubled wi●● 〈◊〉 The County of Essex paid for Composition but two thousand nine hundred thirty one pounds two shillings and two p●nce and having many of the benefits which Midlesex enjoyeth far exceeding the charge of the Compositions for Pourveyance hath four hundred and fifteen Parishes which is little more then seven pound five shillings upon every Parish chargeable for the Compositions and provisions served in kinde Bedfordshire which hath one hundred and sixteen Parishes paid but four hundred ninty seven pounds eight shillings four pence which was but four pounds five shillings nine pence upon every Parish The County of Buckingham which hath one hundred eighty five Parishes two thousand fourty pounds sixteen shillings and six pence which was but something more then eleven pounds upon every Parish one with another Berkshire having one hundred and fourty Parishes but one thousand two hundred and fifty five pounds seventeen shillings and eight pence which did not charge every Parish with
great Talbots or as the Prior of Canterbury did of his Tenants who in every Manor were bound ex antiqua consuetudine providere Priori ibidem de quodam Palifrido competenti tempore novae creations suoe by ancient custome to present the Prior at his election or first admittance a Palfrey fitting for him Or which the Prior of Rochester did of his Tenants of the Mannor of Haddenham in the County of Buckingham who by ancient custome in the eighteenth yeer of the raign of King Edward the third were to Mow and make the Lords Hey Weed his grain in his demesnes pay certain Rent Corn called Booting Corn and five hundred threescore and three Eggs at Easter which in Anno 18 H. 6. were by an agreement made with the Prior of Rochester released for the sum of three pounds and an increase of Rent from thence forward viz. for every Yard land twelve pence every half yard land six pence every Cotland eight pence and every worthy some Tenants so called four pence which is to this day paid and continued And being besides obliged by their customes to the works and services following viz. That every Tenant holding a yard land and the Tenants of two half yard lands ought to plough the Demeasne lands of the Lord two days in the year viz. in Winter and in Lent for which they were to have their dinner allowed by the Lord every Tenant holding a yard land ought in harvest upon a flesh day as also upon a Fish day to be assigned by the Reeve or Bailiff to find two able persons every holder of a half yard every Cotland or Cottogea and every worthy ought to finde the same day one able and lawful person with Hooks or Sickles to reap the Lords Grain in his Demeasnes for which they were to have their dinner allowed them at the charge of the Lord or his Farmer every yard land ought to carry half a quarter of the Lords grain to Oxford being about twelve miles distant to Wallingford neer as much or to Wickham being about ten miles distant being Market Towns near adjoyning to Haddenham and all the Carriers were to have one penny in common to drink the morrow they ought not to work every yard land ought to carry to Marlow eleven quarter of Grain of antient measure at three tearms of the year to be quit from all things by six weeks after and to carry the Lords grain from his demeasnes into his Barn from the furthest field four loads from Dillicot field six loads and if they carry nearer then all the day if it please the Lord also if the Lord shall buy Wood every Yard land ought to carry two loads of Wood from the place into the Lords Yard so it be ready to carry before the Feast of St. Michael otherwise each Yard land should onely carry a horse load so as they may in one day go and return and all that week they should remain quiet likewise if the Lord should build houses he ought to buy Tymber and the men viz. his Coppyholders ought to bring it home viz. each hide every day one Load untill the whole be carryed so as they may in one day go and return also if it please the Lord to send for fish four hides ought to be summoned and two shall go for fish to Gloucester which is about six and thirty miles from thence and other two shall carry it to Rochester upon their own cost and they should remain quiet until they return all the Cotterels and worthy Tenants ought to wash the Sheep of the Lord and to sheer them and fully to perform all thereunto belonging and have nothing therefore and if a theif should be taken in the liberty of the Lord the Cotterel Tenants should keep him And were so due and of so long a continuance as though the Tenants some few onely excepted which would not pertake of the Composition and are still contented to do their work and carriage services did upon a reference made by King James to Henry Earl of Manchester Lord President of his Councel in Anno 1624. to hear and determine the differences betwixt Sir Henry Spiller then Lord of the said Mannor and the Tenants concerning that and other matters within a short time after viz. in the first year of the raign of King Charles the Martyr agree for a Release of the said services not acquitted in Anno 18 H. 6. to pay yeerly unto the Lord of the Mannor and his heirs after the rate of three pence for every Acre and a penny for every Messuage or Cotage which had no land belonging unto it Or as many the like beneficial customes and priviledges at this day enjoyed by the Lords of some thousands or more of Mannors in England which beloned unto the Abbies and Religious houses for which they have quit Rents or other payments not unlike the Compositions for the Royal Pourveyance Or that the Steward of the Kings house should not if the Kings Pourveyance and Prae-emption had not been remitted by Act of Parliament have authority to do as much as the Steward of the Kings house did about the eighteenth year of the Raign of King Edward the second notwithstanding so great priviledges immunities and exemptions granted and confirmed to the City of London command that no Fishmonger upon pain of imprisonment and forfeiture of his goods and chattels should go out of the City to forestall any Sea or fresh fish or send them to any great Lord or Religious house or any person whatsoever nor keep from coming to Town untill the hour appointed for selling be past untill the Kings Achators or Pourveyers should have made their Pourveyance to the use of the King Or that the King of England whose Royal Ancestor King Richard the first did not onely give to many Religious houses as to the Priory of Royston in Cambridgeshire divers exemptions and priviledges to be free from Carriages c. but de Regalium domorum aedificatione ac omnimoda operatione of works towards the repair or building of the Kings houses Ac ut silvae eorum ad praedicta opera aut ad aliqua alia nullo modo capiantur that their Woods or Timber should not be cut or taken for that or any other purpose and whose other Royal Progenitors have abundantly furnished diverse Abbies Religious houses with priviledges to be free of Carriage by Carts Summage upon horses de Thesauro ducendo Convoy of the Kings Treasure de operationibus Castellorum Pontium Parcorum Murorum work to be done in the building or repairs of Castles Bridges or Walls de vaccarum solutione quae dari solebant pro Capitibus utlagatorum and the payment of certain Cows or Cattel to redeem the forfeitures of Outlaws and exemptions from payment of Fumage or Chimny money Lestage or licence to carry away from Markets what they had bought or in release or discharge of customes such as at Beleshale in
or Assessements when they bear a Moiety hath for the most part the Furs of Lapland brought unto him yeerly for the use of himself and such of his Court as he shall please to bestow them giving the Merchants or such as bring them some smal retributions and rewardeth many of his Nobility and sometimes strangers with the vassalage of diverse of the Boors and Husbandmen of the Nation who having few or no liberties of their own can make themselves gainers by invading Germany and pretending to fight for the liberties of other men Doth not do as the Dutch United Provinces and their hoghen Mogen or Corporation of Kings are pleased to do who besides their Schoorsteen gelt or Chimney money yeerly paid and other monies raised upon extraordinary necessities do yeerly exact and leavy de twee honder●ste penning two hundreth penny and the thousandth penny of every mans estate towards the charges of the wars and as ordinary payments and Assessements quae semel recepta as some of their own do acknowledge semper exiguntur once crept into a custom are always leavyed de imposte● v●n de huizen which is an eighth penny paid out of the Rent of every house and a Gulder or our two shillings for every man or Maid-servant which the Master or Mistriss is bound yearly to pay and as much for every Waggon or Boat the Ships or greater Vessels having a rate imposed upon them according to the Tun six gulderen or twelve shillings sterling per annum upon every Coach almost a sixth penny of the Rent of Lands per annum as the Magistrate shall estimate it four Stivers and a half almost our five pence for every Acre of Land sowed with Corn or other things for every moneth from the time of the sowing of it untill the Reaping or Harvest thereof the four●ieth penny and in Amsterdam the eightieth penny as well as the fortieth of all Houses Lands or Ships sold which as to the houses is so often as the State is believed to get in a few years the full price or value thereof den impost van veze gelde brieven which is upon every paper wherein any Contract last Will and Testament Petition or Act in any Court or Assemly or before any Magistrate shall be written to be of any force or validity and to be sealed in the Margin of every leaf of Paper with a small seal two stivers or two pence half penny and with a greater seal if it be of more concernment four stivers or five pence the Impost van onge●on cerde processen for a Fine paid for not making good an Action or Suite for every fifty Guilders or five pounds sued for thirty stivers or three shillings English ●out gelt a certain quantity of salt sold by the Magistrates at a certain rate or price to every Family or Town Excise upon Beer French Spanish Rhenish and Brandewine Oyls Vineger Butter Corn ground at the Mill Pease Fatches Barly Oats Pease dryed or undryed in the Oven Apples Pears Nuts Grapes Herring Salt Fish Candles either Wax or Tallow Turfs English or Scottish Coles Tobacco Sope Pitch Lead Brick Cloth Silk and Cloth of Gold Convoy G●lden Convoy money for guarding Ships at Sea and haven gelden for money to maintain and repair their Ports and Havens a seventh penny of the price of all Beasts or Cattel sold three stivers for every moneth for every young Beast of three years old or above and two for Horses the ninth penny of the price of Sturgeons and Salmons the eighth of the price of Wood and the ninth of Tapestry Hangings and guilt leather their licenten or money to be paid for Passes or Licence to carry Merchandize into the enemies Country or Quarters for every Hog or Pig killed three stivers and a half for every gulder of the value cum multis aliis with many other Taxes and Assessements not here recited the most of which notwithstanding seven or eight years perfect and compleat peace with their potent and long provoked enemy the Spaniard in more then threescore years warres Masses of money expended on both sides can be yet kept on foot and continued upon the pretences of paying of debts incurred or to provide and furnish a Treasury against future contingencies or to keep the government in the hands of the hoghen moghen high and mighty Lords the States who have tasted the sweetness of governing their fellow subjects by laying out of the peoples money and imposing Taxes to maintain that frame of a Commonwealth which pessimo exemplo hath so much troubled Christendom and cost them more blood and money then would have subdued the Turk and sent him from his Ottoman Port to abide the Resurrection of his Mahomet or worthless Progenitor at Mecca and they that thought themselves undone and ruined in the beginning of the Duke of Alvas government if they should pay a tenth for all that was bought or sold and made that to be one of their causes to shake off their obedience and ingage in a war against their lawful Prince could since endure more then ten times greater Taxes and Impositions and can now be content to pay excessive rates and prices for all things that they do buy or use and greater Taxes and Tributes then any the most absolute King or Prince would adventure to impose upon his subjects Et haec omnia teste Grotio tempus majora ferendi assuetudine molli●ra f●cit which as the learned Grotius saith time and a custome of bea●ing such burdens have made more easie and their Magistrates cunningly obse●ving the disposition of that people quaestus inhiantem ac magis pecuniae quam gloriae ac honoris to be more greedy of gain and money then of honor or glory for so Meteranus and Strada describes their nature and conditions have put them on and incouraged them to a liberty of gain and enriching themselves aswell as their Commonwealth and made that to be as the sugar to sweeten the bitte●ness of their Taxes Quae hic multo graviora Graviora ac in aliis si● dictis non liberis Regionibus which are there greater then in other Countries which are said to be not so free Et ex hac Regiones ac urbes seu potius earum Magistratus liberum absolutumque exercent Imperium Imo liberius absolutius quam multis est Regibus in sibi subjectos populus autem eodem respecto multo subjectos servilioris addictioris est conditionis quam ullae aliae in Europa gentes and by this means those Provinces and Cities or rather their Governors or Magistrates do exercise a ●ull and absolute Dominion over them yea a greater and more absolute then many Kings do over their subjects and the people are the●eby made to be under a greater vassalage and in a more servile and slavish condition then any other Nation in Europe and it is therefore more then a surmise that lucri faciendi effraenata